Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

LOVE IN THE TUB

Self care trend beckons the bath. It’s time for good books and tea with lemon and honey, writes

- Ruth La Ferla

BATHING is a steamy indulgence apt to conjure floods of cinematic imagery: Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra lounging in a lotus flower bath; Julia Roberts covered in suds in Pretty Woman; and, on the brawnier side, Sean Connery as James Bond, enjoying a loll in an oversize tub.

But glamour is only part of the draw. Baths are now touted as gadget-free zones, retreats from the sensory overload of daily life.

At the same time, the tub is as often promoted as a playground, a setting from which younger fans post snapshots of themselves adrift in swirls of manycolour­ed suds. Those myriad selfies are but the latest indication that, for a new generation, the bath is heating up.

“In the past two years we have seen bath time taking off,” said Alisha Ramos, publisher of Girls’ Night In, an online newsletter aimed at 25- to 34-year-olds seeking a respite from overcharge­d lives. For her followers and a widening circle of contempora­ries, the bath is a place to unplug, to indulge in the ultimate luxury: taking time for oneself.

Bathing promises serenity on tap, but it also has purely aesthetic appeals. A tour of Instagram and other social platforms suggests that for the tech addicted, the bath is nothing so much as a vehicle for self-expression.

For proof, look no further than Pinterest, where tens of thousands of images showcase the bath as a happy place, a haven stocked with towels piled like layer cakes and caddies that groan with chunky candles and gemlike apothecary bottles.

Log on to Instagram, with its flurry of suds-soaked celebritie­s – Cara Delevingne, Rihanna and Jordyn Woods among them – posting selfies from their tubs.

Or browse #bathart, a hashtag teeming with images like that of a young woman lounging in a bath of finely sliced oranges and limes; another gaily surrounded by rubber duckies; and still others steeped in the kinds of fizzy, undulating colours produced by bath bombs, those wildly popular varicolour­ed spheres that dissolve into a sea of psychedeli­a.

“People want an experience in the tub,” said Brandi Halls, director of brand communicat­ion for Lush, a maker of bath bombs. For many, that calls for a tub full of imagery worthy of a Pink Floyd poster or a frame from Liquid Sky.

Lush is among the most popular in a proliferat­ion of companies promoting the bath’s sybaritic attraction­s. Its unit sales in North America, Halls said, have roughly doubled in the last three years, from just over 8 million bath bombs to more than 15.6 million last year.

But bathing’s reborn popularity can be as readily chalked up to an intensifyi­ng romance with rituals, according to Lucie Greene, a trend forecaster at J Walter Thompson. Bathing, Greene said, offers “a meaningful­ly slow experience that has its own meditative layers.”

According to a 2018 study by the Innovation Group, J Walter Thompson’s trend-forecastin­g unit, the recent fixation on bathing represents a sea change. “Even five years ago, the bath might have been seen as a form of indulgence,” Greene said. “Now it’s recognised as a form of therapy, a tool in maintainin­g a healthy mental outlook.”

It is especially alluring to millennial­s, she said, many of whom are cutting back on drinking and late-night carousing in favour of alternativ­e ways to relax.

For Ed Burstell, senior vice-president for product innovation at Neiman Marcus, “a bath is a form of mental medication.” A self-described restless sleeper and proponent of aromatic balms and potions, Burstell champions the spalike benefits of a lingering soak, a practice that, like yoga, white-noise immersion and maintainin­g a sugar-free diet, is an adjunct of self-care.

It is, moreover, an at-home extension of a global wellness industry that grew 12.8 percent from 2015 to 2017, to $4.2 trillion (R57.1 trillion), according to a 2018 report by the Global Wellness Institute.

Websites and stores like Nordstrom, Neiman Marcus and Anthropolo­gie, and even mass merchants like Target, may aim to tease out shoppers’ inner diva, pitching fizzy elixirs and exotic oils, but for bathing’s most ardent devotees, it helps to have deep pockets.

Consider the outpouring of pastel-tinted creams, oils and gels infused with gold flakes or body wash redolent of a holiday in the Maldives.

Herbivore, a favourite with vegans and self-proclaimed purists of every stripe, recently introduced Amethyst Exfoliatin­g Body Polish, which, as its name suggests, derives its Instagram-worthy purplish hue from a heaping of crushed amethysts.

The extravagan­ce of bath time extends to the tub itself. In more affluent households, vessels made of copper and stone can serve as the weighty centrepiec­e of a bathroom masqueradi­ng as a sybaritic temple.

In its forthcomin­g 2018-19 Industry Outlook Study, the National Kitchen & Bath Associatio­n forecasts a jump in bathtub sales from $9.69 billion for 2017 to $10.34 billion in 2018 and $10.86 billion in 2019. According to the study, soaking tubs, some with hand-painted finishes and others of hammered copper, are especially popular in the luxury market.

The Global Wellness Institute predicts that the industry will continue to grow as consumers are increasing­ly motivated to take charge of their own well-being. |

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 ??  ?? FROM THE TOP:■ A Lush intergalac­tic bath bomb.■ Calista Leah Liew is among the many fans of baths who post images of tubs on Instagram. For a new generation, the tub is a place to rest, heal and get arty. ■ A candle to enhance a bath time experience. ■ Herbivore recently intoduced Amethyst Exfoiating Body Polish ■ Bath bombs from Lush■ An assortment of bath products.
FROM THE TOP:■ A Lush intergalac­tic bath bomb.■ Calista Leah Liew is among the many fans of baths who post images of tubs on Instagram. For a new generation, the tub is a place to rest, heal and get arty. ■ A candle to enhance a bath time experience. ■ Herbivore recently intoduced Amethyst Exfoiating Body Polish ■ Bath bombs from Lush■ An assortment of bath products.
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